7 Surprising Dinosaur Facts

Intro

<p><em>Triceratops</em> ate plants. <a alt="((CONLINK|33060|Tyrannosaurus%20rex))" href="http://www.livescience.com/33060-what-tyranosaurus-rex-ate-dinosaur.html">Tyrannosaurus rex</a> had short arms. <em>Brontosaurus</em> is really <em>apatosaurus</em>. That may be enough dinosaur knowledge to get you through a round of "Jeopardy!" or Trivial Pursuit, but in recent years, paleontologists have turned up many more surprising dinosaur facts.</p>
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<p>We spoke with Mark A. Norell, the American Museum of Natural History's chairman and curator of the museum's division of paleontology, about the most surprising and little-known dinosaur facts. Here's a sneak peek: Baby dinosaurs were really cute.</p>

Pigeon-sized dinosaur

<p>Although the museum's new exhibit focuses on large dinosaurs, not all dinosaurs were massive some species were actually pretty small. In fact, "many were cat or even pigeon-size," Norell said. The smallest known pterodactyl, the <em>Nemicolopterus crypticus</em> (discovered in 2008), had a <a href="http://www.livescience.com/2288-tiny-pterodactyl-fossil.html">wingspan of only 10 inches</a>.</p>

Growth spurts

<p>Dinosaurs grew relatively quickly. The <em>mamenchisaurus</em>, for example, a four-legged, <a href="http://www.livescience.com/6263-dinosaur-tots-baby-faced.html">plant-eating dinosaur</a> with a long neck that made up half of its total 70-foot body length, took only about30 years to grow to adult size.</p>

Fluffy dinos

<p>While most illustrations of dinosaurs depict them as having scaly or thick, leathery skin similar to that of modern-day elephants, it was actually common for dinosaurs to have protofeathers, or a <a href="http://www.livescience.com/3410-feathers-tied-origin-dinosaurs.html">feather-like covering</a>. Protofeathers weren't necessarily a marker for flight, however, as flightless dinos including the <em>velociraptor</em> and <em>beipiaosaurus</em> had downy fluff but no wings.</p>

Long in the tooth

<p>At approximately 45 feet long and 14,000 pounds, the <a alt="((CONLINK|33060|T.%20rex))" href="http://www.livescience.com/33060-what-tyranosaurus-rex-ate-dinosaur.html">T. rex</a> one of the largest land carnivores of all time must have looked pretty imposing based on its size alone. But this massive monster also boasted the longest teeth. Including the root, a <em>T. rex</em>'s tooth can be nearly 10 inches long, or the length of an iPad. With 50 to 60 of those enormous teeth set in its 4-foot-long jaw, the <em>T. rex</em> could bite off 500 pounds in a single chomp about the weight of an adult male tiger.</p>

Piecing it together

<p>Only one complete or even partial dinosaur skeleton is needed in order to <a href="http://www.livescience.com/12946-thunder-thighs-dinosaur-brontomerus.html">identify an entirely new species</a>. "Almost half of the 1,200 or so dinosaurs that have been named are known from unique single specimens," Norell said.</p>

They roam among us

<p>"Dinosaurs are not extinct we just call them birds," Norell said. "In fact, birds are more closely <a alt="((CONLINK|32228|related%20to%20dinosaurs))" href="http://www.livescience.com/32228-what-do-turkeys-and-t-rex-have-in-common.html">related to dinosaurs</a> like the <em>T.rex </em>than the <em>T.rex</em> is to <em>sauropods</em> like the <em>mamenchisaurus</em>."</p>

Baby face

<p>Like most baby animals, <a href="http://www.livescience.com/6263-dinosaur-tots-baby-faced.html">dinosaur tots were baby-faced</a>. In 2010, researchers found the skull of a juvenile plant-eating dinosaur that suggested that some young dinosaurs had proportionally larger eyes and smaller, cuter faces than their parents.</p>
<p><em>Got a question? <a href="mailto:llmquestions@gmail.com">Send us an email</a> and we'll crack it.<span class="system-pagebreak"> Follow Remy Melina on Twitter </span><a class="system-pagebreak" href="https://twitter.com/RemyMelina" style="color: #1b57b1; text-decoration: none; font-weight: normal;">@RemyMelina</a></em></p>

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Author Bio

Remy Melina

Remy Melina was a staff writer for Live Science from 2010 to 2012. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Communication from Hofstra University where she graduated with honors.